12.07.2015 Views

Continental trace fossils and museum exhibits - Geological Curators ...

Continental trace fossils and museum exhibits - Geological Curators ...

Continental trace fossils and museum exhibits - Geological Curators ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

amount of space needed to accommodate thecollection if it is not to be cluttered, cramped orconfusing. Thus, the following organisation couldbe followed throughout the collection, each drawerbearing a label showing:1. Geographical location - e.g., Isle of Wight,British Isles, North America.2. Stratigraphical level - how old is it?3. Ichnotaxon - its classification within the system.4. Alphabetical - arranged within theichnotaxonomic organisation.Such a scheme of organisation is used by the NationaalNatuurhistorisch Museum, Leiden (NNHM), aprimary stratigraphic organisation being secondarilygrouped into geographic areas, e.g., Devonian –Germany, Devonian – France; Upper Cretaceous –The Netherl<strong>and</strong>s, Upper Cretaceous – Germany.Ichno<strong>fossils</strong> should not be classified according totheir perceived producing organism. Any givenichnofossil morphology may potentially have beenproduced by more than one biological species, whichmay belong to different phyla (Pickerill 1994). Onlyin cases where the producing organism is preservedin intimate juxtaposition with the <strong>trace</strong> can such anidentity be established with confidence.Whichever style the institution or curator chooses tofollow is not so important as long as specimens can belocated. There may also be a necessity to divide thecollection into large <strong>and</strong> small components, wherebylarge slabs requiring shelf space have to be separatedoff from small ‘h<strong>and</strong> specimens’ which can be storedin drawers. If this has to be done, the st<strong>and</strong>ard layoutshould be followed as far as possible.Two national collectionsThe evolution of a collection of items in a <strong>museum</strong>can tell a lot about the development of the <strong>museum</strong> asan institution of scientific excellence. Some of theolder <strong>museum</strong>s throughout the world may have startedlife as simple displays of curios without any particularregard to order. As scientific experience grew, bettermethods of display developed. Storage methods soonfollowed suit, for the collections began to grow asinterest was fired amongst the population, <strong>and</strong> noteverything could be put on show. Some <strong>museum</strong>swere set up around a core collection, such as that ofHans Sloane for the British Museum, whose naturalhistory collection was the core which eventually ledto the founding of the daughter institution, the BritishMuseum (Natural History), as the Natural HistoryMuseum (BMNH) in London was known untilrecently. The BMNH is now completely independentof the parent <strong>museum</strong>.The Natural History Museum, LondonThe <strong>trace</strong> fossil collection in the Department ofPalaeontology at the BMNH is modest in size <strong>and</strong>represents collections made from the nineteenthcentury onwards. In the past it contained pretty muchanything that was not readily identifiable, withartifacts (including lumps of concrete with theimpression of the sacking that had once contained it),curiously shaped stones, wind-polished rocks fromdeserts <strong>and</strong> lumps of rock with strange markings,including mineral dendrites resembling plants. Inamongst these were to be found true <strong>trace</strong> <strong>fossils</strong> - theremains of the lifestyles of organisms. It alsocontained, <strong>and</strong> indeed still does, the Problematica,that is, body <strong>fossils</strong> of unknown identity.Eventually, the whole mixed collection was sortedout <strong>and</strong>, with some exceptions, the non-<strong>trace</strong> fossilcomponent was removed from the collection <strong>and</strong>transferred to the correct locations elsewhere in the<strong>museum</strong>. The exceptions include plaster models ofBeringer’s iconoliths (Taylor 2004) <strong>and</strong> curiouslyshaped flints that have a fanciful resemblance tovarious animals (see Lewis 2000). Other nonbiologicalspecimens are also retained for the purposeof illustrating to interested parties the pitfalls for theunwary. One fine example of these, amongst many, isan object which resembles an eviscerated stomach<strong>and</strong> which is actually a ceramic bottle that collapsedduring firing.The remaining true <strong>trace</strong> <strong>fossils</strong> are now stored intheir own part of the storage system of the Departmentof Palaeontology. They occupy 125 drawers in three<strong>and</strong> a half cabinets, six shelves in two cabinets <strong>and</strong> afew slots in the roller storage set aside for large slabs(for a description of the storage units see Owen et al.1982). These do not include the <strong>trace</strong> <strong>fossils</strong> whoseproducers are well known <strong>and</strong> which are stored withthe relevant taxa in other parts of the collections,including the dinosaur tracks stored with fossilreptiles, most of the Gastrochaenolites specimensstored with the molluscs <strong>and</strong> Gnathichnus which arekept with the fossil echinoids.Material from the Ediacara Formation of Australia isalso kept together rather than being distributedalphabetically, with the rock specimens beingsupplemented by plaster casts of the originals held inAustralian <strong>museum</strong>s. These <strong>fossils</strong> also come into thecategory of ‘problematica’, a mixture of <strong>trace</strong> <strong>and</strong>body <strong>fossils</strong> preserved as natural moulds <strong>and</strong> casts.Even though some of these remains may eventually-257-

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!